Angela Carter for the twenty first century: fireworks and strange worlds

Start date 22 June 2018 End date 24 June 2018

Venue Madingley Hall Madingley Cambridge

Tutor Gina Wisker Course code 1718NRX062

Marie Mulvey Roberts

Guest Lecturer Dr Paulina Palmer

Director of Programmes Emma Jennings Public Programme Coordinator, Clare Kerr For further information on this course, please contact [email protected] or 01223 746237

To book See: www.ice.cam.ac.uk or telephone 01223 746262

Tutor biography

Gina Wisker is Professor of Contemporary Literature & Higher Education at the University of Brighton, and has taught at Anglia Ruskin Cambridge where she helped found ,and led the MA in women’s studies, and also taught for the Open University for 20 years and on short courses for the ICE since 1980. Gina’s principal research interests are in contemporary women’s Gothic and postcolonial writing and she has published: Contemporary Women’s Gothic Fiction (2016); Margaret Atwood, an Introduction to Critical Views of Her Fiction (2012): Key Concepts in Postcolonial Writing (2007), Horror (2005). Other interests are postgraduate study, supervision and writing -Getting Published (2015). Gina edits online dark fantasy journal Dissections poetry magazine Spokes and was chair of the Contemporary Women’s Writing Association.

Marie Mulvey-Roberts is an Associate Professor in English Literature at the University of the West of England, Bristol and editor-in-chief and co-founder of the journal Women’s Writing. Her most recent monograph is Dangerous Bodies: Historicising the Gothic Corporeal (2016). She was the co-curator of Strange Worlds: The Vision of , the first exhibition on Carter, held at the Royal West of England Academy in Bristol (9 Dec-19 March 2017) and co-edited the accompanying

University of Cambridge Institute of Continuing Education, Madingley Hall, Cambridge, CB23 8AQ www.ice.cam.ac.uk book/catalogue for Redcliffe Press with Fiona Robinson. She is editing The Arts of Angela Carter: A Cabinet of Curiosities for Manchester University Press and co-editing with Charlotte Crofts, Pyrotechnics: The Incandescent Imagination of Angela Carter, with whom she organised the conference, Fireworks: The Visual Imagination of Angela Carter in Bristol, 2017.

Paulina Palmer studied for the Ph.D. at Cambridge University, affiliated to Girton College and while linked to Girton held the Bryce Tebb Studentship and Ottilie Hancock Bye Fellowship. Paulina subsequently taught for some years as senior lecturer in English literature at Warwick University, where she helped to establish the MA in Women’s Studies. After retiring from Warwick she taught for the MA in Gender and Sexuality at Birkbeck College, London University. Paulina lives in Cambridge and is a trustee of Encompass, the local organization that seeks to promote an improved quality of life for local LGBT people. Publications include Contemporary Women’s Writing: Narrative Practice and Feminist Theory; Lesbian Gothic: Transgressive Fictions; The Queer Uncanny: New Perspectives on the Gothic and Queering Contemporary Gothic Narrative 1970- 2012.

University of Cambridge Institute of Continuing Education, Madingley Hall, Cambridge, CB23 8AQ www.ice.cam.ac.uk

Course programme

Friday Please plan to arrive between 16:30 and 18:30. You can meet other course members in the bar which opens at 18:15. Tea and coffee making facilities are available in the study bedrooms.

19:00 Dinner

20:30 – 22:00 Session 1 Revisiting Angela Carter –considering the excitement and challenge of her work, and the lasting and most recent responses to it, in context. Revisiting ‘’ and an introduction to the art work. Gina Wisker and Marie Mulvey Roberts.

22:00 Terrace bar open for informal discussion

Saturday

07:30 Breakfast

09:00 – 10:30 Session 2 Early stories : “The Lady of the House of ”, “The Bloody Chamber’ and “The Erl King”

10:30 Coffee

11:00 – 12:30 Session 3 Winged women and the Gothic:

13:00 Lunch

14:00 – 16:00 Free

16:00 Tea

16:30 – 18:00 Session 4 Dolls, Marionettes and the Carnivalesque: Angela Carter's The Magic Toyshop, The Infernal Desires of Dr Hoffman and ‘The Loves of Lady Purple’

18:00 – 18:30 Free

18:30 Dinner

20:00 – 21:30 Session 5 Angela Carter on film: extracts from ‘’ dir Neil Jordan, and in art- the Strange Worlds exhibition

21:30 Terrace bar open for informal discussion

Sunday

07:30 Breakfast

09:00 – 10:30 Session 6 The future foreseen, science fiction and feminism :

University of Cambridge Institute of Continuing Education, Madingley Hall, Cambridge, CB23 8AQ www.ice.cam.ac.uk 10:30 Coffee

11:00 – 12:30 Session 7 Ageing indelicately : Angela Carter’s bawdy, Shakesperean comedy, tragedy and revival.

12:45 Lunch

The course will disperse after lunch

University of Cambridge Institute of Continuing Education, Madingley Hall, Cambridge, CB23 8AQ www.ice.cam.ac.uk

Course syllabus

Aims:

In this course focusing on a revival of the work of Angela Carter we will engage together in research and reading informed dialogue to:

1. re-explore , celebrate and develop new insights into the work of the influential writer Angela Carter for the C21st using a range of critical approaches including feminist criticism, cultural critique, queer scholarship and our close reading of her texts and critical work.

2. use new scholarship, new biographical information, and established passions for her work to consider her rewriting of fairytale ; energising the Gothic ; her expression influenced by surrealism and the influence of her work on art.

3. Explore, evaluate and reflect critically on her contributions to twenty and twenty first century writing, popular culture, film, scifi and feminism.

Content:

This course offers the opportunity for us to re-explore and celebrate the work of the influential writer Angela Carter. We will use new scholarship, new biographical information, and established passions for her work to consider her rewriting of fairytale (The Bloody Chamber); energising the Gothic (The Magic Toyshop, Nights at the Circus); surrealism and art (The Holy Family Album and the exhibition Strange Worlds ); her contributions to twenty and twenty first century writing, popular culture, film (The Company of Wolves), scifi and feminism (The Passion of New Eve, Wise Children). We build on the ground breaking Jan 2017 conference Fireworks (www.getangelacarter.com) and recent critical and biographical work (Edmund Gordon, 2017; Marie Mulvey Roberts ,Charlotte Crofts et al 2018).This offers the chance for us together to ignite and reignite new fascinations with her work and its influence.

Presentation of the course:

Short introductory lectures followed by interactive group discussions. One guest lecture.

As a result of the course, within the constraints of the time available, students should be able to:  re-explore, celebrate and develop new insights into the work of the influential writer Angela Carter for the C21st.

 effectively use a range of critical approaches including feminist criticism, cultural critique, queer scholarship and our close reading of her texts and critical work.

University of Cambridge Institute of Continuing Education, Madingley Hall, Cambridge, CB23 8AQ www.ice.cam.ac.uk  engage with and deploy new scholarship, new biographical information, and established passions for her work in considering her rewriting of fairytale ; energising the Gothic ; her expression influenced by surrealism and the influence of her work on art.

 Offer critically informed reading and comments on her work influenced by reflection, critical reading and discussion.

 explore, evaluate and reflect critically on her contributions to twenty and twenty first century writing, popular culture, film, scifi and feminism.

University of Cambridge Institute of Continuing Education, Madingley Hall, Cambridge, CB23 8AQ www.ice.cam.ac.uk

Reading and resources list

Listed below are a number of texts that might be of interest for future reference, but do not need to be bought (or consulted) for the course.

Author Title Publisher and date

Edmund Gordon The Invention of Angela Carter Chatto and Windus 2016

Marie Mulvey Roberts (ed)The Arts of Angela Carter: A Cabinet of Curiosities

Manchester University Press 2018, Gina Wisker Contemporary Women’s Gothic Fiction Palgrave Macmillan 2016

Paulina Palmer Queering Contemporary Gothic Narrative 1970-2012.

Palgrave Macmillan 2016

Texts which we will be discussing include:

By Angela Carter:

The Bloody Chamber, The Magic Toyshop, Nights at the Circus, The Company of Wolves, The Passion of New Eve, Wise Children.

Note Students of the Institute of Continuing Education are entitled to 20% discount on books published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) which are purchased at the Press bookshop, 1 Trinity Street, Cambridge (Mon-Sat 9am – 5:30pm, Sun 11am – 5pm). A letter or email confirming acceptance on to a current Institute course should be taken as evidence of enrolment.

Information correct as of: 25 July 2017

University of Cambridge Institute of Continuing Education, Madingley Hall, Cambridge, CB23 8AQ www.ice.cam.ac.uk